U.K. Freemasonry in the News, have the 'Brethren'
finally met their Waterloo?

The Grand Lodge of England's Coat of Arms
Hooved Angels?

The following instruction sets out guidance governing the membership by members of the
armed forces of societies such as freemasons: there is no intention or policy to preclude
service personnel from membership of any lawful and benevolent organisation. However,
involvement in organisations of a secretive nature, such as the freemasons, carries with
it the risk of establishing disparate loyalties which may have a destabilising influence
on the chain of command, not least by the perception of preferential treatment and undue
influence. While membership of such organisations is clearly a matter for the individuals
concerned, serving personnel should not encourage or promote membership amongst their
colleagues, meetings should not be held on MOD premises, and use should not be made of
any MOD property.

Ministry of Defense
United Kingdon New 2001 Department Policy on Freemasonry in the Military

'Once a Mason, always a Mason'...

HRH giving the Master Mason's 'Grip'...

The Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England, the Most
Worshipful, His Royal Highness, Prince Edward George Nicholas Paul Patrick
33°, Duke of Kent, Knight of the Garter, Field Marshall, GCMC, GCVO, ADC,
Hereditary Grand Master of Anglo-American Freemasonry.

The previous Duke of Kent - George Edward Alexander Edmund was installed
as Grand Master by King George VI in 1939. He died three years later in 1942
in a mysterious plane crash in Scotland, six months after it was alleged he
and the Duke of Hamilton had kept a moonlight appointment with ReichFuerher
Rudolf Hess on the Caledonian Moor.

Historians tell us that the late Grand Master was Pro Nazi and travelled the
Fatherland in order to better educate the King about National Socialism,
so as to allow the Empire to "come to an
understanding" with The New World Order, European Occultist's latest
'Great Work'. Go figure.

The G.L. of England's logoThe original Boyz in the
Hood...

'A Web of Favoritism and Corruption'

Brother, foot to foot teaches you that you should, whenever asked, go on a
brother's errand, if within the length of your cable-tow, even if you should
have to go barefoot and bareheaded. Knee to knee, that you should always remember
a Master Mason in your devotions to Almighty God. Breast to breast, that you
should keep the Master Mason's secrets, when given to you in charge as such,
as secure and inviolable in your breast as they were in his own before
communicated to you. Hand to back, that you should support a Master Mason
behind his back as before his face. Mouth to ear, that you should support
his good name as well behind his back as before his face.

'The Five Points of Fellowship'
Master Master Initiation Ritual

You must conceal all crimes of your brother Masons...and should you
be summoned as a witness against a brother Mason be always sure to
shield him...It may be perjury to do this, it is true, but you're
keeping your obligations.

RonayneHandbook of Masonry, page 183

The Government called him Britain's Biggest Crime Boss - 'Worse than the
Kray Brothers'The United Grand Lodge of England called him 'Worshipful
Master'...

Police search Noye's home for missing lorry which had been
loaded with shoes

nothing found.

Dec 85

Murder of PC John Fordham

Old Bailey

acquitted

Aug 86

Handling of gold from Brinks Mat robbery

Old Bailey

jailed for 14 years (released 1994).

99

International Fugitive

Spain

Extradited

Apr 00

Murder of Stephen Cameron

Old Bailey

Sentenced to life in
prison

'Presiding in the East',
'Worshipful Master' Kenny Noye...

The life of Kenneth Noye has been one of malevolence and corruption.
It is an example of how someone eagerly embracing crime as a profession can
accumulate enormous wealth and frightening power.

Detectives untangling his network of corruption now believe that at least
one prominent MP was in his pay.

Such was the apprehension and nervousness created by the extent of
Noye's corruption of the police that during the investigation into Stephen
Cameron's murder officers were given around-the-clock protection from their
colleagues. Others changed their telephone numbers. The Noye file on the case
was restricted to less than a dozen senior officers.

In 1977 after being arrested by Scotland Yard for receiving stolen
goods Noye joined the Hammersmith Freemason's Lodge in west London. He was
proposed and seconded by two Police Officers. He eventually rose to be the
Master of the Lodge with the support of the membership of which the Police
made up a sizeable proportion. Other Masons included dealers in gold and other
precious metals. A little while later Noye was being helped out of an arrest
by a detective who was a fellow Mason.

One of Noye's police contacts was prepared to intervene on his behalf
not just with fellow officers, but other law agencies. The detective
approached a Customs officer investigating Noye in the early 80s and pressured
him to "lay off".

Of all the professions the law enforcement and intelligence community have
the highest percentage of members who are Freemasons. This also is no
co-incidence as Freemasonry intentionally seeks out new recruits who it finds
the most useful.

Unfortunately organized crime has long been
aware of this, and the more
sophisticated criminals have used Freemasonry in their continual attempts to
corrupt the justice system and 'gain an edge'.

It is for this reason that the British Government has recently put in to
place a registration system for all police officers, judges, magistrates,
prosecutors, prison guards, and parole officers in the U.K. who are 'on the
level'.

Worshipful Master Noye was just the tip of the iceburg regarding
corruption of police by criminals using the lodge system, and by crooked cops
covering up for their activity by using their masonic 'cable
tow'.

'It is not difficult to ruin a man,' he said. 'And I will tell you how
it is done time and again. There are more than half a million brethren under the
jurisdiction of Grand Lodge. Standards have been falling for twenty or thirty
years. It is too easy to enter the Craft, so many men of dubious morals have
joined. The secrecy and power attract such people, and when they come the decent
leave. The numbers of people who would never have been considered for membership
in the fifties are getting larger all the time. If only five per cent of
Freemasons use - abuse - the Craft for selfish or corrupt ends it means there
are 25,000 of them. The figure is much closer to twelve or thirteen per cent
now.'

Christopher explained that Masonry's nationwide organization of men
from most walks of life provided one of the most efficient private intelligence
networks imaginable. Private information on anybody in the country could
normally be accessed very rapidly through endless permutations of masonic
contacts - police, magistrates, solicitors, bank managers, Post Office staff
('very useful in supplying copies of a man's mail'), doctors, government
employee bosses of firms and nationalized industries etc., etc. dossier of
personal data could be built up on anybody very quickly. When the major facts of
an individual's life were known, areas of vulnerability would become apparent.
Perhaps he is in financial difficulties; perhaps he has some social vice - if
married he might 'retain a mistress' or have proclivity for visiting
prostitutes; perhaps there is something in his past he wishes keep buried, some
guilty secret, a criminal offence (easily obtainable through Freemason police of
doubtful virtue), or other blemish on his character: all these and more could be
discovered via the wide-ranging masons network of 600,000 contacts, a great many
of whom were disposed to do favours for one another because that had been their
prime motive for joining. Even decent Masons could often be 'conned' into
providing information on the basis that 'Brother Smith needs this to help the
person involved'. The adversary would even sometimes be described as a fellow
Mason to the Brother from whom information was sought perhaps someone with
access to his bank manager or employer. The 'good' Mason would not go to the
lengths of checking with Freemasons Hall whether or not this was so. The
'target' was presented as a Brother in distress by a fellow Mason, especially a
fellow Lodge member, that would be enough for any upright member of the
Craft.

Sometimes this information gathering
process - often involving a long chain of masonic contacts all over the country
and possibly abroad - would be unnecessary. Enough would be known in advance
about the adversary to initiate any desired action against him.

I asked how
this 'action' might be taken.

'Solicitors are very good at it,' said
Christopher. 'Get your man involved in something legal - it need not be serious
- and you have him.' Solicitors, I was told, are 'past masters' at causing
endless delays, generating useless paperwork, ignoring instructions, running up
immense bills, misleading clients into taking decisions damaging to
themselves.

Masonic police can harass, arrest on false charges, and plant
evidence. 'A businessman in a small community or person in public office
arrested for dealing in child pornography, for indecent exposure, or for
trafficking in drugs is at the end of the line,' said Christopher. 'He will
never work again. Some people have committed suicide after experiences of that
kind.'

Masons can bring about the situation where credit companies and banks
withdraw credit facilities from individual clients and tradesmen, said my
informant. Bank can foreclose. People who rely on the telephone for their work
can be cut off for long periods. Masonic employees of local authorities can
arrange for a person's drains to be inspected and extensive damage to be
reported, thus burdening the person with huge repair bills; workmen carrying out
the job can 'find' - In reality cause - further damage. Again with regard to
legal matters, a fair hearing is hard to get when a man in ordinary
circumstances is in financial difficulties. If he is trying to fight a group of
unprincipled Freemasons skilled in using the 'network' it will be impossible
because masonic Department of Health and Social Security and Law Society
officials can delay applications for Legal Aid
endlessly.

'Employers, if they are Freemasons or not, can be given private
information about a man who has made himself an enemy of Masonry. At worst he
will be dismissed or consistently passed over for
promotion.'

Christopher added, 'Masonic doctors can also be used. But for
some reason doctors seem to be the least corruptible men.

'Only the fighters have any hope
of beating the system once it's at work against them,' he told me. 'Most people,
fighters or not, are beaten in the end, though. It's . . . you see, I ... you
finish up not knowing who you can trust. You can get no help because your story
sounds so paranoid that you are thought a crank, one of those nuts who think the
whole world is a conspiracy against them. It is a strange phenomenon. By setting
up a situation that most people will think of as fantasy, these people can
poison every part of a person's life. If they give in they go under. If they
don't give in It's only putting off the day because if they fight, so much
unhappiness will be brought to the people around them that there will likely
come a time when even their families turn against them out of desperation. When
that happens and they are without friends wherever they look, they become easy
meat. The newspapers will not touch them'.

'There is no defence against an
evil which only the victims and the perpetrators know exists.'

A Judicious investigation, and Short puts forward
a devastating case for the prosecution...He Produces a
persuasive testimony that Freemasonry has become a scourge
and a disease in jobs in the public service. He cites some
fascinating and entirely credible examples of Masonic
Skullduggery - and of Brother ranged viciously against
Brother... It is difficult to dispute Short's conclusion
that disclosure of their Masonic membership by those in
positions of power should be made obligatory."

Piers Brendon, The Observer

When the House of Commons Homes Affairs Committee
recently recommended that police officers, magistrates,
judges, and crown officers should publically register their
Masonic Membership, it was very largely thanks to the
ammunition provided by Martin Short's investigative
tour de force. His "Inside the Brotherhood" carried on
the pioneering work begun by Stephen Knight's explosive
account of "The Brotherhood".

Given the nature of the subject, it is doubtful if a more
conclusive book could have been written".

Alan Rushbridger, Times Literary Supplement

An anatomy of vice...I recommend it".

Mark Archer, The Spectator

On 'The Brotherhood' by Stephen Knight

What Does It Mean To Be 'On The Square?

700,000 Freemasons,
all male, probably make up the largest secret society in
Britain today. Who exactly are they? Why are they so incredibly
secretive? Is Freemasonry a positive charitable organization
which incorporates a certain amount of harmless mumbo jumbo,
or does it in fact represent something more sinister?

Freemasons are all bound to silence, but now some of them
have felt impelled to break ranks and reveal part of the truth
...

'Valuable testimony... impressively researched... He most
certainly has not been wasting his time'

The Observer

'Top of the list of prohibited subjects is Freemasonry... A
barrier of secrecy surrounds it. It has been breached in several
places by Stephen Knight... Some of my best friends are Freemasons.
I wish they would read this book... a revelation'

Richard Kelly, The Guardian

'Sensational Revelations'

Daily Express

Also by Stephen Knight - Jack The Ripper: The Final Solution

Note:

Stephen Knight died suddenly, just 18 months after the publication
of 'The Brotherhood'.

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